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The band is on a tour to promote their album and they saw this mural when they visited Dundee Kneecap

Moglaí Bap's emotional tribute to mother who died by suicide on new Kneecap album out today

Long awaited by the Belfast band’s fans, the new album contains tracks which will not be comfortable listening for UK PM Keir Starmer of Tory Party leader Kemi Badenoch.

(Alt é seo ónár bhfoireann Gaeltachta.  Is féidir leat an bunleagan as Gaeilge a léamh anseo.)

KNEECAP ARE RELEASING a new album today — the second from the globally acclaimed Belfast Irish-language group — and among the 14 tracks on Fenian are songs that address the band’s various conflicts with the British Government, Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu.

The album closes with Irish Goodbye, a song written by Naoise Ó Cairealláin, known as Moglaí Bap, about the death of his mother, Aoife Ní Riain, who died by suicide in October 2020.

KNEECAP / YouTube

Earlier this week the song was released as a single, accompanied by a statement on the group’s social media platforms from Naoise himself, in which he spoke about his mother and her death.

In the statement, Ó Cairealláin said he was inspired to write the song when he saw a documentary showing his mother happy at a time when he and his brothers, Cairbre and Áinle, were young and living in west Belfast. His father, the late Gearóid Ó Cairealláin, was President of Conradh na Gaeilge at the time and a film crew had come to the house to record them playing and doing their homework.

“We weren’t the kind of family who had videos of ourselves when we were young — just photographs — so this was the first time I saw my mam in a video and she was happy.

“That had a profound effect on me, seeing her and seeing her happy — I was so moved to see her like that,” he said.

He explained that he had written another song previously and had told her about it, but that he never got the chance to share it with her before she died.

“She was suffering from depression at the time — the idea I had with that song, Mam, that came out in 2020, was that if I wrote it she would hear it and maybe she’d feel her worth because when you suffer from depression you don’t feel your own value.”

120780251_2786609578260383_5581290546185687415_n Bhí Aoife Ní Riain, máthair Moglaí Bap/Naoise Ó Cairealláin, ag obair le Ráidió Fáilte, stáisiún ráidió Ghaeilge in iarthar Bhéal Feirste Belfast Media Group Belfast Media Group

Now Ó Cairealláin has released another song dedicated to his mother, entitled Irish Goodbye, accompanied by a video that tells a story all too familiar in the area where he grew up — a young man lost to suicide, and the grief and loneliness left behind among his family and friends.

Among the actors appearing in the 13-minute film are Liam Cunningham and Deirdre O’Kane. The film tells its own story while the sound of Irish Goodbye weaves in and out in the background. Ó Cairealláin, in his Moglaí Bap persona, trades verses with guest vocalist Kae Tempest.

“Irish Goodbye is about the ordinary things I used to do with my mam,” he said. “It never occurred to me that the everyday things we did together would be what I’d miss the most — going for a walk in the park, her giving out to me or keeping me on the straight and narrow, giving me advice.

“It’s all those little things you miss.”

He said it was a great honour that Kae Tempest, who has a significant reputation in Britain and internationally, was singing verses on the song, and that Dan Carey had composed the music.

“If people listen to the song and watch the video, I hope something will connect with them that will give them some kind of relief.

“You can’t carry this stuff around with you and blame yourself — it’s not your fault, it’s nobody’s fault. It’s about the process of working through it, and you can work through it, you can.”

Aoife was also a talented musician and played the concertina. There is a reference to this in the lyrics of the song.

Tuigim Mam nach mbeidh tú ar ais go deo
Ach cluinimse do chonsairtín go fóill ag bualadh ceoil
I mo chluas ag teacht anuas ó na flaithis                                                    Sin an rud a líon mo chroíse lán áthais 
[I understand Mam that you won't ever be back
But I hear you play on your concertina still
It comes to my ear from heaven above
It fills my heart with happiness]

This is the final track on an album packed with other songs that will delight the group’s fans and displease the authorities in Britain and others who are hostile to the Belfast trio.

There is a song called An Ra and, given that this is a common nickname for the Provisional IRA in the North, one could easily make the mistake of thinking it refers to that paramilitary group.

But the song is in fact about the other Ra — An Ríocht Aontaithe/Irish for the United Kingdom — and the trio make clear in the opening line where they stand: “Céad slán leis an Ra” (Farewell to the UK).

Kneecap have been strongly associated with the Palestinian cause and it is often stated by them when they are in the headlines that the story concerns Gaza rather than themselves. On the song Palestine, rapper Fawzi from Ramallah performs alongside them in Arabic.

On previously released songs such as Liar’s Tale, they urge people not to accept things, declaring there is “no good in their politics, for you and me,” and the lyrics of Fenian bring to mind Kneecap’s court victory when the British Government attempted to claw back a £15,000 grant (approximately €18,000) on the grounds that the band was anti-British — a claim made by Kemi Badenoch, who was serving as Minister for Business in the Conservative Government at the time.

How to make a few bob off the government grants
But we’re all one together for Republican chants

From 2017, when Kneecap set out on this adventure with the song C.E.A.R.T.A. — which first brought them to public attention — the group has been taking on the authorities, and if there were times when it seemed as though they might be caught, this new album shows they are still well ahead of the posse.

If you need to talk, contact:
Pieta House 1800 247 247 or email mary@pieta.ie
Samaritans 116 123 or email jo@samaritans.org
Aware 1800 80 48 48
Teen-Line Ireland 1800 833 634 (for ages 13 to 19)
Childline 1800 66 66 66 (for under 18s)

The Journal’s Gaeltacht initiative is supported by the Local Democracy Reporting Scheme

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